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在台灣的歐洲學生對台灣的印象 / Images of Taiwnese held by European students in Taiwan吴安娜, Anna Wolska Unknown Date (has links)
This thesis examines the stereotypes of Taiwanese held by European students in Taiwan. One hundred and thirty-six European students approached by email and in person were administered a questionnaire composed of 34 questions.
The results showed that Taiwanese people were in general considered as “hardworking”, “very friendly”, “superstitious” and “modest”.
Eight hypotheses about knowledge about Taiwan and images of Taiwan held prior to arrival, Chinese proficiency, perceived similarity between people in students’ home countries and Taiwanese people, frequency and closeness of contacts with Taiwanese people, willingness to stay in Taiwan after graduation and closest accepted relation with Taiwanese person and their respective influence on the overall image were tested.
Prior knowledge about Taiwan was found positively related to perceived similarity and closest accepted relation. Perceived similarity was found related to the number of declared Taiwanese friends and willingness to stay and along with the rise of the number of Taiwanese friends, the perceived similarity was greater and the students were more willing to stay in Taiwan. Also students who declared more Taiwanese friends accepted closer relations with Taiwanese people.
Pre-arrival images, Chinese language proficiency, frequency of contacts were shown not to influence overall image of Taiwanese held by European students in Taiwan.
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Isaak Babel's Image of the Humanized Jew in the Odesskie rasskazyTreewater, Regan 20 August 2008 (has links)
Abstract
The Russia in which Isaak Babel (1894-1940) wrote was one of deep seated anti-Semitic philosophies and prejudices, a place of pogroms and segregation. Literature of this era painted the Jew as a villainous, dishonest, and feeble minded foreign being within society. Traditionally, Russian literature used the Jew as a national scapegoat or a comical stock character ripe for ridicule.
Babel’s contemporaries considered him to be a born writer with a gift for minimalism without the sacrifice of vivid description. His was an evocative style of brutal humanism, showing both character flaws and character virtues. The Odesskie rasskazy (Odessa Tales) epitomized this honest approach to human portrayal. The Jewish community of the Odesskie rasskazy boasted a variety of characters from all walks of life, rejecting the previously perpetuated stereotype.
The Jew, as shown by Pushkin, Turgenev, Dostoyevsky, Gogol, and Chekhov, was simply a caricature. Such characters were restricted to the role of the fool, the thief, and the opportunist. When Babel first described the community, people, and culture of his native shtetl, the previous stereotype of the Russian Jew became an antiquated relic of the past.
This thesis will explore some examples of earlier depiction of Jews in literature and the humanized image of Russian Jewry that Babel created in his Odesskie rasskazy. The analysis will discuss how these depictions created a new, three dimensional characterization of the Jew.
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Isaak Babel's Image of the Humanized Jew in the Odesskie rasskazyTreewater, Regan 20 August 2008 (has links)
Abstract
The Russia in which Isaak Babel (1894-1940) wrote was one of deep seated anti-Semitic philosophies and prejudices, a place of pogroms and segregation. Literature of this era painted the Jew as a villainous, dishonest, and feeble minded foreign being within society. Traditionally, Russian literature used the Jew as a national scapegoat or a comical stock character ripe for ridicule.
Babel’s contemporaries considered him to be a born writer with a gift for minimalism without the sacrifice of vivid description. His was an evocative style of brutal humanism, showing both character flaws and character virtues. The Odesskie rasskazy (Odessa Tales) epitomized this honest approach to human portrayal. The Jewish community of the Odesskie rasskazy boasted a variety of characters from all walks of life, rejecting the previously perpetuated stereotype.
The Jew, as shown by Pushkin, Turgenev, Dostoyevsky, Gogol, and Chekhov, was simply a caricature. Such characters were restricted to the role of the fool, the thief, and the opportunist. When Babel first described the community, people, and culture of his native shtetl, the previous stereotype of the Russian Jew became an antiquated relic of the past.
This thesis will explore some examples of earlier depiction of Jews in literature and the humanized image of Russian Jewry that Babel created in his Odesskie rasskazy. The analysis will discuss how these depictions created a new, three dimensional characterization of the Jew.
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